The paper implements a methodology for assessing the regional impact of investment grants on foreign direct investment (FDI) location, taking data for U.K. regional policy over the period 1985-2005. Using a Generalized Methods of Moments estimator it finds that each £25 million of grant changes the regional location of about six inward FDI projects. On average, projects have 150 jobs and each job diverted costs £27,500 (1995 prices). It also finds that the size of the area designated for grants has a positive location effect. The effect is small in relation to the overall scale of FDI, which may explain the weak grant effect found in recent plant-based location studies. © 2010, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Wren, C., & Jones, J. (2011). Assessing the regional impact of grants on fdi location: Evidence from U.K. Regional policy, 1985-2005. Journal of Regional Science, 51(3), 497–517. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9787.2010.00708.x
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